This invention relates generally to prevention of persons or property from unwanted or unnecessary events through radio (RF) based combat identification (IFF) systems, as well as hunting safety prevention.
The present invention is related to U.S. Pat. No. 8,179,247 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/022,982 which provides systems for detecting fellow hunters in danger zones.
The issues related to hunting accidents are not resolved by conventional methods. The current procedure for identification of other hunters in critical areas is provided by highly reflective or illuminated clothing worn by hunters. These solutions only work under high visibility conditions. For other environments where sight is limited, such as in heavy brush, fog, or loss of daylight, these methods provide little information about another hunter's presence.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,179,247 describes a solution to conventional means by providing a Ka band transmitter and detector which is directed by a horn antenna. The problem with this method is that components in the Ka band are relatively expensive to develop and mass produce as compared to similar operating components in lower frequencies. The inventors, however, have chosen this band due to the ease of directionality produced with compact horn antennas.
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/022,982 provides a solution which uses a lower frequency band than said U.S. Pat. No. 8,179,247 with the aid of infrared sensors. This logic of this design follows that infrared sensors are very directional and the RF sensors are not very directional. The invention then provides both packages into a signal system such that short and long range detection is possible. The drawback is that infrared sensors cannot penetrate through brush or animals and therefore can be prone to misinformation.
The instant invention presents an alternative to using coupled RF and infrared sensors and/or Ka band RF frequencies.
The instant invention solves the problem of highly expensive components necessary to use RF only sensory in a directional detection system.
The system utilizes a Yagi antenna which can be scalable by the number of elements and geometry to provide the directionality needed for the specific hunting event. The RF energy radiated by the person or property of interest can be captured by the Yagi antenna and evaluated by a signal processor. The result can be outputted to an alarm which can warn the hunter of unwanted targets in the general direction of the firearm that he or she is pointing at.
The block diagram for the sensor is illustrated in
The system for alerting hunters of unwanted targets includes a Yagi RF antenna, a signal processing circuit, and an alarm which tells the hunter whether or not discharging the firearm is appropriate.
The Yagi antenna is necessary to provide the directional sensing necessary to inform the hunter of the directionality of the targets of interest.
The RF signal processor, placed in the block diagram in
The alarm, shown as the final step to the block diagram in